S. Africa’s treatment of Dalai Lama torpedoes Nobel laureates conference

Cape Town’s mayor on Thursday “suspended” a planned summit of Nobel Peace laureates, blaming the South African government’s “intransigence” in refusing to grant a visa to the Dalai Lama. South Africa has refused three times to grant the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader a visa as it builds closer ties with rising superpower China. The latest rejection prompted a group of Nobel Peace Prize winners to threaten to boycott the October event. “The majority of Nobel laureates and laureate institutions requested that either the summit be moved to another country, or that the visa to his holiness, the Dalai Lama, be granted unconditionally,” the city authorities said in a statement.

I’m ashamed to call this lickspittle bunch my government.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu

"Given the continued intransigence of the South African government on this matter, this eventuality appears unlikely at best," said the opposition-controlled city. The summit was meant to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the end of apartheid and the legacy of the late first black president, Mandela—also a Nobel Peace Prize winner. Pretoria’s decision to put realpolitik first has been met with equal consternation by many in Mandela’s "Rainbow Nation", who view it as a betrayal of his ideals. Laureate FW de Klerk, South Africa’s last white president who negotiated an end to apartheid, said he heard news of the suspension with the "greatest sadness". "It says a great deal about what our government has become," de Klerk said in a statement. Fellow South African Nobel-winner Desmond Tutu accused President Jacob Zuma’s government of "kowtowing" to China.

The suspension of the Cape Town Summit may be seen by future historians as the point at which South Africa finally lost its claim to represent something special in Africa and something noble in the international community.

FW de Klerk, South Africa’s last white president